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Nexus 6P and 5X have finally received an "unofficial" bootloop fix

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For owners of the bootloop issue affected Nexus 6P and Nexus 5X devices, we got some good news for you. A developer has created a fix that can reportedly bring the dead handsets back to life.
Last year, Google’s last Nexus devices, the Nexus 6P and 5X got affected by a bootloop issue, causing the device to remain stuck at the boot screen. This caused several lawsuits to be filed against the manufacturing companies. Many of the users were unable to secure replacements for their devices as they were not in warranty period and ended up having a dead device. Taking the matter into his own hands, a developer has created a fix for the devices.
Aided by two other people, an XDA user, XCnathan32, has created a fix, by stopping all the performance cores of the device, enabling the device to boot once again. Although there has been no official reason given for the issue, but stopping these cores seems to fix it. More precisely, it stops all the A57 performance cores, making the device to work only the power-efficient A53 cores. This reportedly makes the device laggy but does get a better battery life.
The developer has tested the fix on his Nexus 6P device and has reported that it’s working totally fine. Though the fix for Nexus 5X is untested and has been uploaded for users to test it out on their devices. Interested folks can get the fixes from the source links below.
Source: XDA (1) , (2)

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Israel imposes ban on reporting on shooting at Amman embassy

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Two Jordanians died from wounds inflicted during a shooting on Sunday in the compound of the heavily-guarded Israeli embassy that also wounded an Israeli, police and a security source s
Two Jordanians died from wounds inflicted during a shooting on Sunday in the compound of the heavily-guarded Israeli embassy that also wounded an Israeli, police and a security source said.
Police said earlier that the two Jordanians worked for a furniture firm and entered the embassy compound before the shooting to do repairs. Police did not identify the wounded Israeli, and few other details were immediately available.
Israel has imposed a ban on reporting the incident and has made no public comment.
The fortress-like embassy in the affluent Rabae district of the capital Amman is protected by Jordanian gendarme. It has long been a flashpoint of anti-Israeli protests at times of turmoil in the Palestinian territories.
Violence against Israelis is rare in Jordan, a tightly policed country that is also a staunch regional ally of the United States and signed a peace treaty with Israel, the Arab neighbor with which it shares a long border.
But tensions have escalated between the two countries since Israel installed metal detectors at entry points to Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem after two Israeli policemen were shot dead by three Arab-Israeli gunmen on Friday near the site.
The new security measures have triggered the bloodiest spate of Israeli-Palestinian violence for years.
Jordan has called for the removal of the metal detectors and thousands of Jordanians have protested against the Israeli move in an outpouring of public anger against Israel.
Jordanian police said after Sunday’s shooting that they sealed off the embassy compound and deployed dozens of anti-terrorism gendarmie forces.
«We have started a large scale investigation into the incident and ordered the prosecutor general to look at all the details, » the police said in a statement.
Initial checks suggested the two Jordanian men had entered the embassy compound as workmen, the statement said.
Many of Jordan’s 7 million citizens are of Palestinian origin. They or their parents or grandparents were expelled or fled to Jordan in the fighting that accompanied the creation of Israel in 1948.
Israel has in the past given repeated assurances that it understands Jordan’s concerns and does not seek to alter the status quo in the Muslim holy sites of Jerusalem.
King Abdullah’s Hashemite monarchy has been custodian of the sites since 1924, paying for their upkeep and deriving part of its legitimacy from the role.

© Source: http://www.independent.ie/world-news/middle-east/israel-imposes-ban-on-reporting-on-shooting-at-amman-embassy-35960682.html
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Jamaica stuns Mexico, advances to Gold Cup final vs. U. S

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Kemar Lawrence’s free kick in the 88th minute sent the Reggae Boyz to a 1-0 victory Sunday and allows them to advance to Wednesday’s final.
These Reggae Boyz are staying cool, even after a goal that sent them into the CONCACAF Gold Cup final with a chance to make history.
Lawrence scored on a clutch 24-yard free kick in the 88th minute, and Jamaica advanced to the final with a 1-0 upset victory over Mexico on Sunday night.
“I think our guys were hungry, ” Jamaica coach Theodore Whitmore said. “They needed it more than the Mexicans, and we did what we had to do.”
Jamaica will face the United States on Wednesday night at Santa Clara, California. With a victory over the home team, the Reggae Boyz would claim their first championship in soccer’s North and Central American and Caribbean region.
“The best way I could put it is the Biblical story, ” Whitmore said. “David slew Goliath.”
The Reggae Boyz have reached the final for the second straight Gold Cup, but this stunning upset at the Rose Bowl ranks among their biggest international wins. Mexico has won seven Gold Cup titles, the U. S. five and Canada one.
“That’s a cycle we want to break, ” Whitmore said. “That’s something we sit and discuss. It’s always Mexico, U. S. We want to be in that group. We want to be a team, a country that someone can talk about, and that’s what we’ re working toward.”
Jamaica goalkeeper Andre Blake kept this game scoreless with a series of impressive saves while Mexico dominated possession with a lineup missing most of El Tri’s most-accomplished players.
But after Lawrence repositioned the ball in a bit of shifty gamesmanship, his late strike froze Mexico goalkeeper Jesus Corona. The ball curled over the wall and slipped just below the bar for the New York Red Bulls defender’s third international goal and first in three years.
The 24-year-old Lawrence doesn’ t take free kicks for his MLS club, but Whitmore knew his quality from recent practices.
“The New York Red Bulls probably have a better kicker than Kemar Lawrence, ” Whitmore said with a smile. “Now, Jamaica’s team needs Kemar Lawrence in dead-ball situations. It’s a totally different thing. Probably when the New York Red Bulls see this tonight, they might (want him) to take free kicks.”
Trying to win its second consecutive Gold Cup and fourth in five tournaments, Mexico used the deeper reaches of its player pool following the World Cup qualifiers and the Confederations Cup last month. While teams were allowed to make up to six substitutions for the knockout rounds, El Tri coach Juan Carlos Osorio said he was blocked by Mexico’s clubs.
Mexico hadn’ t trailed in the tournament before Lawrence’s late goal, but El Tri also hadn’ t been impressive — no player scored more than one goal.
“This is a process, and it takes a lot of work to get a team that can compete in a World Cup, ” assistant coach Luis Pompilio Paez said. “This is not a sufficient result, but this is the middle of the process. I saw a team that gave everything. We always respect what the other team does. We just needed to get a goal, and we didn’ t have the right circumstances. Embarrassment, sadness — as a team, we feel it.”
Blake also starred 11 days ago when Mexico and Jamaica played to a 0-0 draw in Denver. With the Philadelphia Union keeper playing exceptionally well, Jamaica has allowed only two goals in the tournament.
The semifinal crowd was dominated by Mexico’s vast Southern California fan base, yet the Rose Bowl was less than half-full with just 42,393 fans. The absence of Chicharito Hernandez and other top Mexican stars, combined with El Tri’s unattractive performances in the Gold Cup to date, apparently kept many of their usual faithful at home.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino watched the semifinal from the Rose Bowl stands. So did Osorio, who served the fifth game of a six-match FIFA ban for his conduct toward officials during the Confederations Cup.
Mexico beat Jamaica in the 2015 Gold Cup final, and El Tri also defeated the Reggae Boyz 2-0 at the Rose Bowl just 13 months ago during the Copa America. Jamaica finally got one back, beating Mexico for the first time in the teams’ eight Gold Cup meetings.
Blake made two brilliant saves in succession in the 12th minute, diving twice to stop close-range chances by Jesus Duenas and Erick Torres, the Houston Dynamo star and the only player on the current roster from outside Mexico’s domestic leagues.
Blake did it again in the 25th minute, stopping Torres’ point-blank header from the top of the 6-yard box with improbably quick reactions.

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Philippines Pokes China With Intent to Drill for Oil in Disputed Sea

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Manila put off drilling for oil and gas around Reed Bank in the South China Sea in 2014
Plans in the Philippines to reopen a tract of the disputed South China Sea for oil and gas exploration is likely to complicate the foreign policy of Manila’s new friend Beijing, which claims the same waters, and adds to a regional pushback against Chinese maritime influence.
Philippines oil drilling plans
The Philippine Department of Energy is ready to restart drilling at Reed Bank, an 8,866 square-kilometer table mount west of Palawan Island, domestic news reports say. In December 2014 the government suspended those plans to prepare for world court arbitration over which country had a stronger claim to the feature.
That court in The Hague ruled that Reed Bank falls within a Philippine ocean exclusive economic zone. China rejected the outcome and in May warned Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte against reopening it for exploration, Philippine media reports say. China claims more than 90 percent of the sea.
“You had Duterte saying he spoke to (Chinese President) Xi Jinping in May and China threatened to take action if they started drilling, ” said Carl Thayer, Southeast Asia-specialized emeritus professor at The University of New South Wales in Australia. “It’s a sensitive time. July 12 was the anniversary of the arbitral tribunal decision.”
Ismael Ocampo, director with the Department of Energy’s Resource Development Bureau, said this month he expected the country to lift the drilling suspension by December, per news reports from Manila. The department did not answer a VOA request for comment.
China with a ‘wait and see’ strategy
Chinese officials have kept quiet about Reed Bank this month, though on July 12 a foreign ministry spokesman in Beijing said China was “dedicated from start to finish to negotiating with related countries to resolve disputes” related to maritime sovereignty.
The Philippines may be using Reed Bank to see how far it can push China, said Fabrizio Bozzato, a Taiwan Strategy Research Association fellow specialized in Asian political issues.
“Probably Mr. Ocampo’s statement is a way that Manila has to test China’s resolve or restraint or even to elicit some cooperative stance from China without risking to irritate or antagonize Beijing, ” Bozzato said.
China might answer any drilling at Reed Bank by withholding aid or investment as promised or allocated to date, Bozzato said, hurting Duterte’s ambition for economic development. Chinese officials could restart any suspended aid if relations improved.
China had pledged billions in aid
China pledged $24 billion for the Philippines in October, and Duterte’s government set aside the maritime sovereignty dispute with China, which claims waters off most of his archipelago’s west coasts. Duterte is tapping China now to help fund parts of a $167 billion plan for new public infrastructure by 2022. His predecessor, in contrast, had filed for the world court arbitration.
A strained friendship with Beijing would push Manila back toward Washington. Duterte has resisted U. S. military aid in his 13 months in office so far, delighting China.
Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam as well claim parts of the 3.5-million-square-kilometer South China Sea, prized largely for its oil and gas reserves.
Beijing officials are probably taking a long view of ties with Duterte, who they see as more volatile than other world leaders, so they may cut him slack, experts said in April after another flap involving China.
Fewer than half of Filipinos surveyed in the first quarter of 2017 trust China, research institution Social Weather Stations found, and analysts say Duterte must bear that in mind as an elected official.
Other countries testing China
China may also see a trend of resistance developing beyond Reed Bank, experts say. They point to Vietnam’s agreement this month with India’s offshore oil and gas driller to explore in a tract that Beijing claims and to Indonesia’s deletion of the word “China” from its official name of the sea near the island of Borneo.
“I think the worst case scenario is that the Southeast Asians (are) divided, look over their shoulder and one by one start making their accommodations to China, ” said Euan Graham, international security director with the Lowy Institute for International Policy in Sydney.
“We’ re not seeing it when it comes to these key countries, ” he said. “Indonesia, the Philippines…certainly the Vietnamese are continuing I think their sort of steady push to try to assert control.”

© Source: https://www.voanews.com/a/philippines-pokes-china-with-intent-to-drill-for-oil-in-disputed-sea/3956349.html
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Dozens dead after Kabul bomb attack

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At least 24 people have been killed in a car bomb attack in Kabul on Monday morning, according to an Afghan Interior Ministry spokesman. At least 42 others were injured in the blast.
The group was targeting a bus carrying Afghan intelligence staff, the statement, released by Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said. It was not clear if the targeted individuals were the victims of the attack.
Afghanistan’s Chief Executive, Abdullah Abdullah, «strongly condemned» the attack.
«I strongly condemn the terrorist attack on civil servants in Kabul today, » a tweet from him reads. «Our security institutes will hold perpetrators accountable.»
President Ashraf Ghani’s office also released a statement condemning the Taliban’s attack.
«The enemy of Afghanistan can’t face our forces in battle field so they target innocent civilians, » it said.
The bombing is the latest in a long line of attacks in the Afghan capital. Last month seven people died when suicide bombers struck the funeral of the son of a senator killed during anti-government protests.
The Taliban denied involvement in that attack, which injured 119 people.

© Source: http://edition.cnn.com/2017/07/24/asia/afghanistan-kabul-car-bomb-attack/index.html
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Japan PM Abe denies favors for friend amid falling support

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Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, his ratings sinking over a suspected cronyism scandal, on Monday said he had never instructed officials to give preferential treatment to a long-time friend, adding that the latter had never sought favors.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, his ratings sinking over a suspected cronyism scandal, on Monday said he had never instructed officials to give preferential treatment to a long-time friend, adding that the latter had never sought favors.
Abe and his aides have repeatedly denied intervening to help Kake Gakuen, an educational institution whose director, Kotaro Kake, is a friend of the prime minister, win approval for a veterinary school in a special economic zone. Abe’s support has plunged below 30 percent in some opinion polls, hit by the suspected scandal and a perception among many voters that his administration is taking them for granted. The slump is encouraging rivals and casting doubt on Abe’s prospects of becoming Japan’s longest-serving prime minister by winning a third three-year term when his current tenure ends in September 2018. Abe told a special session of parliament’s lower house budget committee that it was not surprising the public had doubts, given that Kake had been his friend since they were students, but added that Kake had «never once» sought favors. «There was no request or lobbying regarding the establishment of a new veterinary school, » Abe said. Asked if he had intervened in the approval process, Abe said: «I have never issued instructions regarding specific cases.» Abe also pledged to regain public trust by «producing results», giving priority to the economy and diplomacy.
国会では、安倍総理大臣も出席して集中審議が行われています。加計学園の獣医学部設置に「総理のご意向」があったかどうかを巡って、和泉総理補佐官と文部科学省の前川前次官の主張が食い違いました。 和泉総理補佐官:「『総理が自分の口から言えないから私が代わりに言う』。

© Source: http://newsonjapan.com/html/newsdesk/article/120595.php
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APeJ public cloud services market will exceed $10b in 2017: IDC

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According to the research firm, infrastructure-as-a-service spending in Asia Pacific excluding Japan will exceed that of software-as-a-service for the first time in 2017.
The public cloud services market in Asia Pacific excluding Japan (ApeJ) will exceed $10 billion in 2017, according to IDC, driven by infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) , which will surpass software-as-a-service (SaaS) for the first time this year.
According to the IDC Worldwide Semiannual Public Cloud Services Tracker, IaaS spending in APeJ will reach $4.8 billion in 2017, marking a 47.8 percent share in the region and a 35.8 percent growth from 2016.
SaaS spending in the region will grow 29 percent over the year to mark a 45.6 percent share; while public cloud services will register a 6.6 percent share in APeJ, growing 37.2 percent over 2016.
«Digital transformation is driving multi-cloud and hybrid environments for enterprises to create a more agile and cost-effective IT environment, » said Liew Siew Choon, senior market analyst for IDC’s APAC services research team.
«Even heavily regulated industries like banking and finance are using SaaS for non-core functionality, platform as a service (PaaS) for app development and testing, and IaaS for workload trial runs and testing for their new service offerings.»
Drivers of IaaS growth include the increasing demand for more rapid processing infrastructure, as well as better data backup and disaster recovery, according to Liew.
Countries such as China are also focused on cloud infrastructure and leveraging internet service providers as a way of promoting public cloud services, the report added.
The top three public cloud service providers in the region for 2016 are Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, and Alibaba, with a combined 50 percent market share, according to IDC. Microsoft’s IaaS revenue contribution surpassed SaaS by the end of last year, the firm added.
IDC previously predicted that spending on public cloud services and infrastructure will reach $266 billion in 2021, dominated by SaaS.
The US will also account for more than 60 percent of worldwide cloud revenues through 2021, with total spending of around $163 billion, IDC added.

© Source: http://www.zdnet.com/article/apej-public-cloud-services-market-will-exceed-10b-in-2017-idc/
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70% Anker Quick Charge 3.0 63W 5-Port USB Wall Charger — Deal Alert

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Features 5 ports, optimized to charge phones, tablets, and any other USB device at max speed.
This premium wall-charger from Anker features 5 ports that pump out 63W of power — enough for the whole family to simultaneously charge multiple devices at the highest speed possible. Right now it’s discounted 70% to just $27 on Amazon, where it averages 4.5 out of 5 stars from over 500 customers. Right now when you buy this item you’ ll also activate a 10% discount on other select Anker products including their power bank and bluetooth speaker. See this deal on Amazon.

© Source: http://www.infoworld.com/article/3209676/mobile/70-anker-quick-charge-3-0-63w-5-port-usb-wall-charger-deal-alert.html
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32M employees offered biochip hand implants for work monitoring, payments

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The chips can be used to login to PCs, use company machines, and make purchases — but how many will sign up?
Three Square Market (32M) is offering implanted chips to employees interested in being biohacked.
The new scheme, which 32M emphasized as being voluntary, begins on 1 August. According to the firm, the RFID chip will be implanted into their hand to «make purchases in their break room micro market, open doors, login to computers, use the copy machine, » and other work-related purposes.
While optional, the marketing solutions provider expects over 50 employees to undergo the procedure.
«We foresee the use of RFID technology to drive everything from making purchases in our office micro markets, opening doors, use of copy machines, logging into our office computers, unlocking phones, sharing business cards, storing medical/health information, and used as payment at other RFID terminals, » said 32M CEO Todd Westby. «Eventually, this technology will become standardized allowing you to use this as your passport, public transit, all purchasing opportunities.»
32M isn’t necessarily wrong. While the idea of having a chip implanted into your body may make some feel squeamish or give rise to conspiracy theories, near-field communications (NFC) is the same kind of technology we have in our contactless credit cards and what makes mobile payments possible.
NFC chips activate when in contact with another chip to pass small amounts of data between each other, demand very little power, and already are used to identify us.
Some may consider having such a device always to hand, as it were, as simply the next step.
This particular scheme is made possible through a partnership between 32M and Swedish biohacking firm BioHax International. Employees interested in being chipped will be able to have the implant at 32M’s «chip party» on 1 August at the firm’s headquarters in River Falls, Wisconsin.
BioHax is not the only Swedish company which considers implanted NFC chips as the future of payment processing.
Several years ago at the Kaspersky Labs Security Analyst Summit in Cancun, Mexico, I saw a presenter undergo the same implant, offered by Swedish grassroots movement and network BioNyfiken .
The procedure itself caused the willing victim to sweat in pain — although I believe the derma-implant specialist caused this by using the wrong gauge needle to implant the chip between his thumb and forefinger — however, BioNyfiken biohacker Hannes Sjoblad said at the conference that the chip is worth the discomfort, as it can be used to replace everything from credit cards to gym membership.
«The weakness in wearables is that people get bored, » Sjoblad said. «It is simply another thing that clutters people’s lives [..] but we want something which is always on, always there and does not disturb your life.»
The idea of being chipped may not appeal to everyone, even if it could be used as a quick ID system and a way to streamline and reduce all of your digital clutter. However, at least for health monitoring purposes, the idea has merit.
We may see more businesses adopting the chip process in the future — while it remains to be seen what happens with the chip and stored data should employees leave a company.

© Source: http://www.zdnet.com/article/32m-employees-offered-biochip-hand-implants-for-work-monitoring-payments/
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How smugglers use trucks with sometimes deadly results

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It could take months for investigators to determine what preceded the deaths of at least nine people found with dozens of ailing individuals in a tractor-trailer discovered outside a Walmart…
CHICAGO (AP) — It could take months for investigators to determine what preceded the deaths of at least nine people found with dozens of ailing individuals in a tractor-trailer discovered outside a Walmart in San Antonio, Texas, in what authorities are calling an immigrant-smuggling attempt gone wrong.
But previous cases of smugglers using similar trucks to move human cargo shed light on the dangerous method of human trafficking — and how it can quickly turn fatal.
Here’s a look at how smugglers deploy and use large trucks to move people:
HOW COMMON IS HUMAN TRAFFICKING BY TRUCK?
Border officials have reported an uptick in the number of people-smuggling incidents using tractor-trailers. That included one on July 7, when Border Patrol agents in Laredo, Texas, found 72 people from Mexico, Ecuador, Guatemala and El Salvador locked inside a trailer. Weeks before, they’d rescued 44 people from Mexico and Guatemala discovered after police stopped an 18-wheeler near one of the city’s international bridges.
Whether this recent increase is a trend and what might explain it is hard to know. A recent report from European-based global -risk group Verisk Maplecroft suggests that a harder line on border security by the Trump administration might be leading migrants to accept the risks of more dangerous smuggling methods.
By far the most notorious and best documented case occurred in 2003, when 19 of about 100 people being smuggled in a truck trailer in south Texas died of heat-related injuries; that included a 7-year-old boy. More than a dozen smugglers were convicted in that case, including the American commercial driver at the wheel, Tyrone Mapletoft Williams, and the purported head of the smuggling ring, Karla Patricia Chavez-Joya, a Honduran national.
WHERE ARE THE IMMIGRANTS FROM?
Transportation by truck is often one of the final steps in a process that can begin months before somewhere in Mexico or more than a thousand miles from the U. S.-Mexican border in Honduras or Guatemala. A review of court documents in other cases indicates the tractor-trailers are often brought in only after Mexicans and Central Americans arrive by train, bus or car to the Mexican-U. S. border region — and then slip into the U. S. by foot or by raft across the Rio Grande.
In the 2003 case, the pickup site for the immigrants was near Harlingen, Texas, about 20 miles (32.19 kilometers) from the U. S.-Mexican border. The plan was to drive the tractor-trailer through an immigration checkpoint 50 miles (80.46 kilometers) away on Highway 77 near Sarita, Texas; once through the crossing, the immigrants were to be transferred to separate vans bound for Houston.
WHY TRUCKS?
The objective of immigrants who make it undetected across the border typically isn’t to remain in that border area. Most hope to make it to large U. S. cities, like Chicago or New York, where they may have jobs or family waiting for them. That’s where the trucks come in. Smugglers know there are hundreds and thousands of immigrants desperate to get away from the border as fast as possible. And they see the money-making opportunity. The more people they can move at one time, the more the profit.
In the 2003 case, the smugglers actively sought non-Hispanic, American drivers who they believed would be less likely to raise suspicions and more likely to make it through the Sarita checkpoint. Tyrone Williams, a licensed truck driver from New York, fit that description. Just before picking up his human cargo, Williams had hauled milk products from New York in his refrigerated truck.
HOW DO THEY DIE?
Dehydration, hyperthermia, suffocation, and mechanical asphyxia have been among the causes of death in truck cases. In the 2003 case, Williams’ trailer was equipped with a refrigeration unit that enabled him to haul milk earlier at 35 degrees Fahrenheit (1.67 Celsius) from New York to Texas. But when it came to his human cargo, he didn’t turn it on. The immigrants remained silent as Williams was waived through the checkpoint, but they soon after began banging on the sides of the trailer as it became increasingly hot and increasingly hard to breathe. Finally, fearing detection, Williams unhooked the trailer at a truck stop in Victoria, Texas, and drove off. An appellate court later described the scene inside: «Bodies, both dead and living, were stacked in a pile in the trailer. Some of the aliens were standing behind the pile. The aliens were stripped down to their underwear and were sweating.»
CHARGES
Because the crime involves the crossing of international and of state borders, it’s often federal authorities who prosecute human traffickers. The available charges range from conspiracy to aiding and abetting the transporting of unlawful aliens resulting death. Maximum sentences can range from a few years behind bars and to the death penalty. Prosecutors did initially indicate they would seek the death penalty for Tyrone Williams. But in 2012, a federal judge sentenced him to more than 30 years in prison without the possibility of patrol.
Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

© Source: http://www.news9.com/story/35951940/how-smugglers-use-trucks-with-sometimes-deadly-results
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